Why has a nation founded upon precepts of freedom and universal humanity continually produced, through its preoccupation with race, a divided and constrained populace? Scott Malcomson's search for an answer took him across the country--to the Cherokee Nation, an all-black town, and a white supremacist enclave in Oklahoma--back though the tangled red-white-and-black history of America from colonial times onward, and to his own childhood in racially fractured Oakland, California. By not only recounting our shared tragicomedy of race but helping us to own it--even to embrace it--this important book offers us a way at last to move beyond it.
A long, dense book but packed with history and well worth reading. I especially liked:
(1) The history of the Cherokees in Georgia before the Trail of Tears. Some of the men were college-educated and lived like white men and married white wives. Yet they were still driven out. They couldn't win, no matter what they did and how much they assimilated.
(2) The author's story of growing up in mixed-race Oakland, California, how the whites, blacks, and Asians were friends in elementary school but, by high school, had all withdrawn into their racial groups. He tried to fight the trend by joining the Asian group.
Recommended to anyone willing to read a long, dense tome with lots of gems.
I was amazed at how much I didn't know about race relations in America. For example: segregation may have lasted longest in the south but the concept of contamination by contact the laws that embodied it were first promulgated in the northern and western states after the Civil War. This was an important book for me. I was also amazed, to learn that virtually every non-rebel state passed laws after the civil war banning colored people. They were not enforced but the fact of their promulgation alone is shocking. This book delineates many levels, forms and times of racial prejudice in America, which makes it the best resource I've come across. This is not to gainsay the many fine slave histories and other explications of more particular aspects of racism in America but this book was important to my knowledge and understanding.
A really powerful book in parts, oddly weak in others, I thought his personal life story section was very mixed. The ending was particularly unsatisfying.